I know Avery Johnson's Mavs were pretty established as was Mike brown's Cavs and maybe Mo Cheeks' Trailblazer group.
But how many other African American coaches have been handed over a good coaching situation and asked to take the team to the next level and a championship recently?
African American coaches are getting an opportunity to coach but are they being given environments to succeed?
This summer we've seen Terry Porter down in Phoenix and Michael Curry out in Detroit. That's two good situations. 50 plus win teams with veteran talent.
It's an interesting question though. I had a quick look over the past 5 seasons and I count three African-American Head Coaches who've won playoff series
(winning a playoff series being a decent barometer for coaching a talented team was my thinking there):
Mike Brown (Cavs), Byron Scott (Hornets), Avery Johnson (Mavs), Nate McMillan (Sonics). Frank Johnson got a decent chance with a talent Suns team but they were more mediocre than good.
Looked back on the 5 years after that and picked out - Scott (Nets), Mo Cheeks (Blazers), Paul Silas (Hornets), Lenny Wilkins (Toronto), Lenny Wilkins (Hawks). Worth noting Isiah Thomas with an improving Pacers team.
There's a quick look at a decade of appointments.
Avery Johnson - Given a very Mavs team
Mo Cheeks - Given a Blazers team that was still a contender but starting to decline
Byron Scott - Hornets team was poor and was completely rebuilt during his time there. Nets team was poor and was completely rebuilt there.
Paul Silas - Took over a floundering team that was a borderline playoff squad.
Lenny Wilkins - Very good young Raptors team that had just lost McGrady. Still they were considered on the rise and were spending money. Lenny's Atlanta team were a good playoff squad that floundered under a bad coach the year prior.
Mike Brown - Team had just failed to make the playoffs after collapsing late in the season. New GM spent a load of money and rebuilt the roster, same team that made the Finals. So just about given a contender.
Nate McMillan - Took over a Sonics team looking to rebuild. Mediocre squad.
Isiah - Same as Nate
Frank Johnson - Promising young team on the rise. Mediocre but had young talent emerging.
So what's the count there ... four guys given teams capable of winning a playoff series, five more somewhere on the borderline for the playoffs with different levels of promise, two (both Scott) more given lottery talent.
Memory gets hazy quickly so only playoff series winners here. To follow that up with the previous five years ('94-'98)
John Lucas (Spurs)
The previous five years ('89-'93)
Stu Jackson (Knicks), Don Chaney (Rockets). Worth noting KC Jones took over a promising Sonics side.
Here's a quick look:
John Lucas - 50 win team in San An based around Robinson
Stu Jackson - Pitino's 50+ win Knicks were who he took over
KC Jones - Sonics team that was a 47 win team with a similar base, plus a young Shawn Kemp, that never won a playoff series.
Don Chaney - Two years removed from the Finals. Good playoff side but not a contender.
What's the count there? Two good teams capable of winning playoff series. Two solid teams capable of winning a series.